Saturday, July 13, 2019

Guest Blogger: Faye Mc Nall has an update for you


Greetings to all of you from retirement-land!  I am enjoying the summer weather in Maine, although it was slow to arrive!  Conditions for boating have been spectacular lately, and I am doing what I love best, going out to sea as often as I can.



Linda Kelly and the rest of the ASET crew are very busy planning the 2019 ASET annual conference and addressing all the last minute details to make this the BEST EVER 60th anniversary celebration for ASET!


What I would like to share with you today, are my thoughts on Kansas City.  My first visit to Kansas City was in 1997, when I was newly elected to the ASET Board of Trustees and arrived to be sworn in and partake of my first Board meeting.  That was the year that some of us on the Board put on the infamous “Wizard of Oz” skit.  My partners in crime were Bobby Taskey, Willy Riordon and Gary March, along with Dave Weaver, Larry Head and Margaret Walcoff.  I played the part of the Wicked Witch! 


Once I became ASET’s Director of Education in 2004, I have traveled to K.C. and ASET’s headquarters at least once a year.  I have had ample opportunities to explore the city.

Since I have always lived in New England I know that East Coast (and West Coast) folks tend to discount the Midwest as not so hip or cool.  I shared this limiting perspective too.  But since I have been in K.C. at least 15 times, I have discovered how hip a Midwestern City can be!  A new, free streetcar line makes it easy to explore.

So, I encourage you to come to K.C., ASET’s home base, for our 60th anniversary celebration and I will share with you some of the best things about this great city!

The Food! – This foodie heaven is known for BBQ and great steaks!  There is also a great local brew pub scene!

Great Neighborhoods to explore:

Crown Center: Where the conference hotel is located – has a shopping center and many good food choices, plus great things for kids! – Legoland, Aquarium, and Hallmark’s Kaleidoscope creative arts center for kids, with daily sessions that offer a free art experience for them.  Also for kids – the nearby K.C. Zoo!

Union Station – An historic gem of a train station in the Crown Center area, now home to restaurants.

Power and Light District – this neighborhood is named after the 1931 Art Deco skyscraper that anchors the area.  You will find 9 walkable blocks of restaurants, pubs, night clubs and outdoor music venues.

Country Club Plaza – Started in 1922, with beautiful Spanish architecture, this is a mecca for shopping and dining, another walkable district that you can spend a full day or evening exploring!

Westport – A small, edgy neighborhood known for nightlife, that was once a landmark on the historic Santa Fe trail.

Casinos – On the riverbank on the outskirts of the city you will find a very lively casino scene!



Don’t miss list”

BBQ

Live Blues and Jazz music in the Power and Light District


Fountains everywhere!


Shopping at the Country Club Plaza



And of course, don’t miss the ASET 60th Annual Conference with a great program of educational events and lots of opportunities to network!  Register for the conference here: ASET Annual Conference Registration

Monday, May 6, 2019

News from the ASET Director of Education: My retirement


Greetings to all the neurodiagnostic techs, physicians and ASET members who are reading my blog

The view from here:  I will be sharing my afternoon naps in the hammock with a bald eagle now and then!



This will be my final blog entry as Director of Education for ASET.  On May 17th I will be retiring from this most wonderful of jobs!  It was a great run at 14 years!  I am grateful to all of my ASET friends for helping me in so many ways!  There were countless times when I sought someone to give a presentation on a specific topic and there was always someone willing to step up to the podium, sometimes as a last minute replacement for a speaker.  This week I will be celebrating my 68th birthday, and I started working at the age of 15, scooping ice cream at the local dairy stand.  Work of some sort has been a part of my life ever since. I went to a one year school for EEG technology in 1978 and knew then that I had found my calling!  I loved everything about this work!  I loved getting to know patients and spending time with them, since EEGs take a while and you have to get a good history and keep patients relaxed with good conversation.  I loved seeing the first pages of the EEG after finishing lead placement, always a surprise to see an abnormality when you really didn’t think it would be an abnormal study!  The only thing that I did not like was the ink and the way the pens would get blocked.  I often had black ink on my hands and on my lab coat from cleaning the pen system.  You didn’t have to drag me into the era of the digital EEG!

What I really loved about working in clinical neurophysiology was the sheer variety of daily work!  In one day, the work included doing four or five EEGs, some out-patients, some in-patients, sometimes to the ICU or neonatal ICU, somedays to the O.R. with an LTM patient.  I have always said, this career offers so many choices for career paths that you can find your special niche.

If you want to read the ASET newsletter article from the Spring 2019 issue about my retirement, please use this link:  https://newsletter.aset.org/tribute-to-faye-mcnall-aset-director-of-education-2005-2019/

Thanks so much to Maureen Carroll and Anna Bonner for writing this article and thanks to all ASET members who contributed a tribute for the article.  You guys had me crying for sure!

Linda Kelly, R.EEG/EPT, RNCST, CNCT, BS will be the new ASET Director of Education and she will do a fantastic job.  It gives me great joy to turn the reins over to her, knowing that she will be dedicated to making ASET’s Education the best that it can be!  She has been training with me for some time and has some great ideas for the future.

I will get to see all of my ASET friends at the 2019 ASET Annual Conference in Kansas City!  I am honored to be presenting the Kathleen Mears Lecture: The View from here: A Perspective on Neurodiagnostic Technology. 

From my abstract…

“Over the past fourteen years, in my role as ASET’s Director of Education, I have had the unique opportunity and privilege of communicating with many people every day, from across the country, to across the globe.  The diverse range of callers include neurodiagnostic technologists, physicians, and those seeking advice to enter this field.  My presentation will include a reflection on the many questions asked, and most pressing concerns shared with me.  Based on the “top ten” questions asked by callers, I have determined the key trends and concerns related to the practice of Neurodiagnostic Technology.  Key workforce issues and supporting data will be included.  I will also provide suggestions for resources that can be used to address those questions.  When contemplating the overall message that becomes apparent in reviewing the years of conversations, I find that there are many uplifting and inspirational thoughts to be shared.”

Signing off until then,

Sincerely,


Faye Mc Nall, M.Ed, R.EEG T.


Friday, March 22, 2019

The Best of the Best in the World of Neurodiagnostics


“There are some who bring a light so great to the world that even after they are gone, the light remains”

Quote from Leigh Standley (Curly Girl)


Lucy Sullivan and me, visiting Dr. Neidermeyer at his home, Dec. of 2011.


There are three great lights in the world of Neurodiagnostic Technology whom I think of often, and whom I will always miss.   They are Lewis Kull, Gary March and Dr. Ernst Neidermeyer.  On April 2nd , it will be ten years since we lost Lew!  It is important to me to share the enthusiasm they all had for this field and the many contributions they made to the education of neurodiagnostic technologists across the country. 

I met Lew Kull when I took a job working with him at the Boston Children’s Hospital EEG Training Program in 1990.  He was the consummate teacher and held the interest of our students over months of lectures on many topics.  There was nothing he could not master himself, and he had high expectations of his students.  We spent nine wonderful years working together, before he moved on to a new opportunity at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital in New York City.   It was there that he had a tragic accident, in April of 2008, he was crossing a street on his way to give a class to technologists studying for their EEG Board Exams, when he was struck by a delivery truck.  He sustained a traumatic brain injury.  Eventually, he regained consciousness, but his injury was very severe, and left him in a compromised state, and he remained hospitalized until he passed away on April 2, 2009. 

The second shining star, Gary March, was a technologist in New York state for many years, working at Albany Medical Center, and eventually opening his own neurodiagnostic business. In addition to being a great speaker and teacher,  Gary was the most enthusiastic meeting planner for the Charles E. Henry Neurodiagnostic Society, the regional society of New York State.  Their annual meeting was one of the best, and well attended events, because Gary was able to put together such great programs and recruit a diverse array of speakers.  No easy task and I can tell you that from personal experience.  Gary fell ill suddenly in 2011 and pancreatic cancer took his life so quickly, and way too early at age 54.

The third shining star is Dr. Ernst Niedermeyer. Dr. Neidermeyer literally “wrote the book”on EEG, publishing several editions of his iconic text book on Electroencephalography over the years.  I had the privilege of getting to know him personally, and it was an honor to be his friend.  He had the most interesting life!  He was born in Germany in 1920, and survived World War II and a conscription into service in the German Army and was captured by American Troops and sent to America as a POW.  After the war, he went to Austria and completed medical school, where he developed his lifelong interest in the brain and neurology.  In addition to being a brilliant electroencephalographer, he was an accomplished pianist and an avid hiker, climbing many mountains in the Alps.  Dr. Niedermeyer always accepted invitations to speak at ASET meetings.  He must have mentored many physicians and technologists on all facets of EEG over the years, another treasured teacher. He left this mortal coil in 2012 at the age of 94 and was as sharp as a tack when I last saw him in December of 2011.

It is important to take a moment and appreciate those who help us grow into the best that we can be!




Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Call for Neurodiagnostic related Abstracts for the ASET Annual Conference - Deadline Extended!


ASET's 60th Anniversary Annual Conference will take place in Kansas City, MO on August 15-17, 2019.  We are seeking abstracts: both platform and poster for presentation at this event!  Read on!

What is an abstract and why should I consider authoring one?



An abstract is a short descriptive statement that explains a larger work or presentation.  The ASET annual conference program includes platform (oral) and poster abstract presentations.  An abstract presentation provides an opportunity to share innovative ideas, new techniques and interesting case studies. 

When completing an abstract application form for the ASET annual conference, you are required to include a 100-200 word abstract to be included with the application.  The abstract is essentially a proposal that explains what you intend to present.  The ASET Program Committee will review all abstracts to ensure that content is appropriate and there is no conflict of interest.  Once accepted by the program committee, I will notify you of acceptance, and I will assign you a presentation time if a platform abstract.  Platform presentations slots are 30 minutes long.  We recommend that you end your presentation with 5 minutes to spare, to allow time for questions. 

For poster abstract presenters I will provide a schedule of poster viewing times.  We ask poster abstract presenters to stay with their posters during these official viewing times, to interact with attendees and give them time to chat with you about your topic.

What are the advantages of presenting an abstract?

·         You will get free meeting registration for the day of your presentation

·         Your abstract will be published in the December issue of the ASET Journal, “The Neurodiagnostic Journal”.  This means that your abstract will also appear in larger bodies of scientific data, such as PubMed.  You will be a “published author” and can be included in your curriculum vitae.

·         Your audience will benefit from the sharing of information and opportunity to hear new ideas and network to provide the best neurodiagnostic services possible.

·         You’ll have an opportunity to try public speaking with a very short presentation, sharing something you know, to build your confidence in a supportive environment.


Tips for writing an abstract:
Be concise:  you only have 100-200 words!

Answer these questions:

·         What is the importance or reason for your research, project or case study?

·         What problem does this work highlight and attempt to solve?

·         What methods did you use?

·         What were your results?

·         What are the implications or advantages of your work?


  I encourage you to complete an abstract application prior to the March 15 deadline for submission.  You can access the on-line application version at our website, and you can upload the abstract during the application process.  We cannot consider including abstract applications unless an abstract is attached.  Please use this link: ASET 2019 abstract application


What’s your idea?





I’d love to hear from you!  If you have questions or wish to run an idea by me, please contact me directly at faye@aset.org

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

Neurophysiology 101: Learning the 10/20 system of head measurement and lead placement: How and Why





Many years ago, the ABRET EEG exam included an oral exam which included several sections, including record review, EEG pattern recognition and a demonstration of skill at measuring a head and placing leads accurately.  When I took the exam in 1980, volunteer subjects served as the candidates’ patients, and we actually ran a real EEG recording as part of the exam.  Eventually, the live subject process was no longer practical and ABRET substituted a “Sam” mannequin head, and candidate had to measure and apply leads to Sam instead.

In more recent years, the oral section of the ABRET exam ended for many valid reasons, and a two-part, written only exam replaced the oral exam.  For the past year, the EEG registry exam has been offered in one-part. 

Once the exam no longer included a practical demonstration of head measurement and lead placement skills, an apparent misconception surfaced, that this was not an important part of the EEG recording process.  However, both ABRET and ASET have always stressed that measuring the patient’s head prior to lead placement is an essential part of the patient set-up. 
Occasionally, an attendee at the ASET EEG Boot Camp inquires about a 10/20 head measurement/lead placement workshop as part of the seminar.  We used to include such a workshop but it was very difficult to maintain and ship enough Sam heads to make this workshop “work”.  We also found that many seminar attendees were not interested in participating.  So, in recent years, we replaced that time in the seminar with additional lectures and instrumentation workshops.  But, once again, I would like to emphasize that we at ASET promote head measurement as a very important part of the lead placement process, and accurate electrode placement is vital!

There is a full on-line curriculum of EEG coursework created by ASET and available as individual courses on the ASET website.  One of the courses is EEG 202: Electrodes, Electrode Placement and Application.  I am pleased to announce that we have just upgraded the content of this course!  
Maureen Carroll, the ASET On-line Course Developer, worked on creating a professional video tutorial on the skills of head measurement and lead placement.  She spent many hours scripting the video, and working with a media studio to film the demonstration.  This video is 40 minutes in duration and offers a step by step overview of the process, and has been uploaded as a lesson in the on-line course. 

I can highly recommend this course for entry level technologists and trainees!  You will benefit from the coaching and detail included.  Enrollees can revisit the video as often as they wish while learning this skill.  The course offers 20 ASET CEUs, meaning that there is at least 20 contact hours of course material, and the registration fee is $199 for ASET members and $299 for non-members. To view the course in our on-line store, please use this link:  ASETon-line EEG courses